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  | JULIANNE MOORE DOESN'T SEE THE END OF THE FILM |  
   
 
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    | This alliterative strait was once called Boca del Puerto de San Francisco | 
    Golden Gate
 
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    | Old Mother Hubbard found that the cupboard was this, not its kangaroo word "barren" | 
    bare
 
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    | In "Mockingjay--Part 2", this actress found a new way into Julianne's heart--with an arrow | 
    Jennifer Lawrence
 
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    | Imperial court official Tsai Lun produced the first rolls of this in China around 105 A.D. | 
    paper
 
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    | A saying about this empire's vastness in the 18th to the 20th century was that "the sun never sets" on it | 
    the British Empire
 
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    | Last name of Alphonso & son William Howard, both Secretaries of War | 
    Taft
 
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    | The name of this ancient city, home to the Ishtar gate, means "gate of the gods" | 
    (Jason: What is Jerusalem?)
  Babylon
 
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    | Some said the debutante "blossomed" at the ball; others used this word | 
    bloomed
 
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    | Louis Daguerre got photography started & William Fox Talbot helped by making & printing photos using reverse images called these | 
    negatives
 
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    | Luke 6:13: Jesus "called unto him his disciples: and of them he chose twelve, whom also he named" these | 
    apostles
 
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    | In early 1801 Sec. of War Samuel Dexter found himself acting as Sec. of Treasury & State for the last weeks of this president's term | 
    John Adams
 
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    | When John F. Kennedy visited this gate in 1963, East Germans put up red curtains so he couldn't see into East Berlin | 
    Brandenburg Gate
 
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    | You "indolent" lazybones! Stop being so this | 
    (Eric: What is...) ... (Alex: Yes, I was hoping Eric--I would have had a great line to follow. "Eric, [*], yes!")
  idle
 
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    | In 1901 this physicist & inventor sent the first radio message across the Atlantic, from England to Canada | 
    Marconi
 
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    | In a 2019 movie this superhero punched an elderly woman on a train (but she had a really good reason) | 
    (Shari: Who is Wonder Woman?)
  Captain Marvel
 
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    | This Christmas plant with red leaves was named for Martin van Buren's Secretary of War | 
    (Alex: Yes, Joel Poinsett.)
  a poinsettia
 
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    | Hell Gate, from a Dutch word, connects this "directional" river to Long Island Sound | 
    the East River
 
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    | You're safe to leave that precious item in my "charge", or in my this | 
    care
 
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    | Oh, it was definitely "The End of the Affair" for Julianne with this actor who also played "The English Patient" | 
    [The end-of-round signal sounds.]
  Ralph Fiennes
 
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    | In 1898 Maria Beasley patented a device for preventing trains from doing this | 
    derailing
 
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    | In September 1882 thousands of workers held a march in NYC & this holiday was born | 
    (Eric: What is St. Patrick's Day?)
  Labor Day
 
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    | How awkward! John Floyd, this president's Secretary of War, resigned & quickly joined the Confederacy | 
    (Eric: Who is Lincoln?)
  Buchanan
 
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    | The Donuimun Gate in this capital was dismantled during Japanese occupation in 1915, so now it's called the Invisible Gate | 
    (Alex: Less than a minute to go now.)
  Seoul, South Korea
 
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    | She led him down the path to "destruction", aka the road to this | 
    ruin
 
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    | Ms. Moore's car ride came to a very sudden end in this film set in 2027 about a world ravaged by infertility | 
    Children of Men
 
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    | In a movie Greg Kinnear played Robert Kearns, who fought Detroit over this drizzly day innovation of his | 
    (Jason: What are windshield wipers?) (Alex: Be more specific.) (Jason: Windshield wiper--um, automated windshield wipers.) (Eric: What are windshield washers?)
  intermittent windshield wipers
 
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    | The subject of "A Beautiful Mind", in 2015 he won the Abel Prize for his work on partial differential equations | 
    (John) Nash
 
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